Courtesy Readers Digest 1981. November.
From the frontiers of science and the far horizons of
personal courage, these stories of medical triumphs and miracles will reaffirm
your faith in the awesome powers of the human spirit. Dramatic victories and human
triumphs
One morning I stretched in bed and felt a pain in my right
breast. I touched the spot with my
fingers; there was a tiny lump, about half the size of an olive. I lay there for a minute thinking. I was 37 years old. What a terrifying coincidence. Mother had been 37 when she had her operation
for breast cancer. I wasn’t sure my lump
was anything serious, but I remembered how it had been with Mother. She was the sort of person who believed it a
disgrace to be ill. She waited too long
to see the doctor. Ger operation hadn’t
cured her; the cancer recurred in the uterus, and the second time they didn’t
operate. They treated her with radium,
but that didn’t work either. She died
when I was 19, a senior in college.
With these memories crowding in one me, I wanted to see a
doctor right away. My husband Hod (a
nickname for Horace) and I, with our two little girls, had just moved to
Seattle, and we didn’t know any doctors there.
After a bad experience with obstetrician who diagnosed the lump as “just
nerves,” I went eventually to an internist.
He felt the lump and send me immediately to a surgeon. The surgeon told me the lump ought to come
out the next day. He would have it
examined on the spot by a pathologist.
If it turned out to be cancer, he would go right ahead and do a radical
mastectomy; remove the breast and all surroundings tissue likely to be invaded
by cancer, including some muscles and the lymph nodes under the arm. He knew about my mother and wasn’t about to
take any chances. I was pretty sure it
wasn’t cancer. I may have prayed about
it. Raised a Presbyterian, I had married
a Mormon. Not wanting a house divided,
my daughter and I had studied Mormon faith and been baptized the preceding
year.
I knew the bible quotation: “Is any sick among you? The
prayer of faith shall save the sick,” we asked some of out Mormon friends,
elders in the church, to come to the hospital and pray. They came, put their hands on my head and
asked the Lord’s blessing, and prayed for my recovery. It was a simple, spontaneous act, not words
read out of a book. But in this
time-honored ceremony. I knew I had been
blessed—that there had been communication with Our Lord.
The next day, when I was taken to the operating room, both
Hod and I were quite calm. When they
didn’t bring me out after a few hours, he knew that they must have found
cancer. He says he didn’t worry, and I
believe him. He has a calm faith in God,
and he trusted our doctors—and he has always made me feel the same way.
My friend thought when I woke up after the operation was
that there was a ten-ton truck on my chest.
This was the pressure bandage put on to keep fluid from
accumulating. “We’re sorry,’ a doctor
said, “but we had to do the radical.” I
was pretty groggy from the anesthesia, but even so I was shocked. Remember, I was only 37—that seems very young
to me now, 16 years later—and I was proud of my body. I knew what the alternative was, though, and
the doctors cheered me by saying that they had got out all the cancer in one
piece of tissue. As far as the surgeons
could tell, I was free of disease: “You might as well worry about being hit by
an automobile,” he said. “As to think
that you will die of cancer.”
But what really convinced me that I was going to live was a
peculiar experience I had a day or two after the operation. I was lying in bed, quite alone, when I heard
a voice say, “You are going to be fine.”
It’s possible that I was still feeling the effects of drugs, but I heard
that voice as clearly as I’ve ever heard anything in my life. It dramatically renewed my faith, gave me
strength and tranquility.
After nine days I was able to go home. Hod came and got me. He acted as though I had just got over a bad
cold, or something equally trivial. That
night we watched a television verity shoe with a line of chorus girls wearing
low-cut gowns. I began to cry. Hod turned to me and said, “and what are you
crying about?” It made so mad that I
quiet crying—and I’ve never cried since.
What he said may seem heartless, but he was under doctor’s orders:
tender, loving care was great, but sympathy would only get me feeling sorry for
myself.
I was very touchy at first.
The doctor said, “You must have something to help you bathe; otherwise
you might lose your balance and fall.”
When I protested, “You don’t mean you want me to let my husband see me!”
he just laughed and said, “Of course I do.”
And Hod was so unconcerned about the scar that I began to get over my
embarrassment. About four weeks after
the operation, I went to a department store for my prosthesis—a false breast
worn in a brassiere. The woman in the lingerie
section was merry understanding, and the prosthesis was quite comfortable.
After a radical mastectomy you have to work to recover the
use of your arm. It is painful, because
the muscles have been cut; but if you don’t exercise they heal in a stiff and
awkward way. So I did what the doctors
ordered: walked my fingers up the wall, waved my arms, everything to get the
motion back. I love golf, and was
especially anxious to get back to it.
There were some twinges as I began swinging a club, but I kept at
it. When I first went out to the course,
I was rather nervous. But I took a full
swing and something tense me relaxed as that white ball flew into the sun. It was a nice drive, straight done the
fairway.
I was even more nervous the first time I put on a bathing
suit at a friend’s pool. Would my scar,
which went rather high in my neck, embarrass the others? Well, nothing risked, nothing gained. It was hot, and I wanted to swim. So I walked out, trembling a little inside,
and dived into the pool. Nobody even
noticed.
As the years passed, the operation receded from by thoughts. The girls grew up and married. Hod and I had a wonderful time. Of course I had the checkups the doctors
ordered, including chest X-rays and the Pap test, every six months at first and
then every year. But there were no
further problems. I had long ago
considered myself cured when I discovered a lump in my left breast as I was
taking a shower. I reported directly to
my surgeon. “I don’t know what it is.”
He said, “So we’ll operate and find out.
With your history, even if the lump is not malignant, I will remove the
breast. But I’ll not do a radical unless
the lump is malignant.”
Two days later they operated. The lump was not malignant—but underneath he
did find a spot of cancer. When I came
out of anesthesia, the doctor told me this—and that he had had to do the
radical. I wasn’t feeling so flippant,
but my retort was, “Hurray, now I match!”
I now felt that my troubles were behind me. The pathologist’s report was negative,
meaning that the cancer had been confined to the one spot. So I was concerned more about regaining use
of the left arm as soon as possible, and seeing my new grandson, than about the
threat of future disease. Actually, the
second operation was easier to take, both emotionally and physically, than the
first—and I was playing golf within two months.
After moving from Seattle to Salt Lake City, I went to see
dermatologist about a lingering ear infection.
He took a biopsy and told me there was local cancer-cells
involvement. “Please don’t be alarmed,”
he said. “It’s not metastasis
[spreading] of the breast cancer, just a basal cell skin cancer,” But it had
got into the cartilage, and needed some plastic surgery so, I entered the
hospital. As a precaution, the surgeon
ordered a regular checkup, including chest X-ray, before we went to the
operating room. While I was still
unconscious, he told Hod that the X-ray had disclosed a walnut-sized lump in my
right lung that would have to come out.
“How are we going to tell her? He asked.
Hod said, “Just tell her. She can
stand the truth as well as I can.”
They gave me five days to recover from the ear operation,
and then we went back to surgery for the lung.
It was a much longer and more difficult operation than the mastectomies,
and more painful afterward. For three
days I was in intensive care. But there
was good news from my doctor. The
pathology report showed that the cancer—it was definitely metastases of the
breast cancer—had been confirmed to that single tumor which he’d removed with
the middle lobe of my right lung.
Nevertheless, I began to feel resentful. I knew I’d been lucky, but I was getting a
bit tired of being so lucky so many times, perhaps because I was older,
51. But after six weeks—a month at
hoe—the doctor said I was recuperating perfectly and could go with my husband
to a convention in Coronado, California.
It was beautiful there, sunny and warm, and I began to feel strong
again.
For a year I was fine, traveling with Hode, playing golf,
visiting our grandchildren. And them I
had an attack of pneumonia. During a
series of sputum tests, cancer cells were found. This means that there is cancer in my
chest. They’ve been giving me radiation
treatments to reduce fluid accumulation, and now chemotherapy has been
started. The situation is not good, but
I know that I’ve been helped before I believe my doctors when they say there is
a good chance of arresting the spread of the cancer.
People often ask me if my cancer is hereditary. The doctors say no, although they think there
may be a hereditary tendency in some families for some forms of cancer. Since my mother and I both had breast cancer,
this is clear warning to my daughters, one doctor told me. They should be extra careful as taught by the
American Cancer Society.
Another question that comes up shy, after all I’ve bee
through; I’m not angry or depressed. My
answer is: if the doctors give you every chance to live a normal life, well,
why not does it? They’ve always been
honest with me. They’ve said frankly in
the past that they don’t know when or if another form of cancer, of another
metastasis, will show up. But I can’t
see sitting around the moping.
I’ve lived a full, happy life through three major cancer
operations. I’ve watched my daughters
grow up and seen three grandsons born since the first tumor. And I’ve not been living in fear. On the contrary, I’m more fearful about
getting abroad an airplane than I am about undergoing anesthesia. Hod and I have had a good life together; I
feel we’ve had a present of 16 marvelous years—more than some have in their
entire lives. As for the future—nobly
knows that except God. And I have faith
in Him, just as I have always had.
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